Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (c-Jun)
11,453 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate form of vitamin E [vitamin E succinate (VES)] inhibits the proliferation of avian reticuloendotheliosis virus-transformed RECC-UTC4-1 (C4-1) lymphoblastoid cells in a dose-dependent manner, blocks the cells in the G2/M cell cycle phase, and induces the cells to undergo apoptosis. Apoptosis was documented by demonstrating changes that are characteristic of this type of cell death, including morphological analyses of chromatin condensation by 4',6-diamidine-2'-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI) staining using scanning confocal and traditional fluorescent microscopy; flow cytometry analyses of propidium iodide-labeled DNA showing fragmented DNA as a pre-G1 peak; two-color flow cytometry analyses of intact cells labeled first by the TUNEL procedure (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end-labeled DNA stained with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled avidin) and then by propidium iodide demonstrating fragmented DNA; and electrophoresis of DNA showing a DNA ladder created by internucleosomal DNA fragmentation. The percentage of apoptotic cells was determined by DAPI staining and showed 11%, 27%, and 49% of cells to be apoptotic after treatment with 10 micrograms/ml VES for one, two, and three days, respectively. Analyses of mRNA levels of genes that have been implicated in the apoptotic process, namely, bcl-2, c-myc, and c-jun, revealed no change in bcl-2, decreases in c-myc mRNA levels after 36 hours of treatment, and increases in c-jun mRNA levels within four hours after treatment. Western immunoblotting analyses of protein levels for the transcription factors c-Myc and c-Jun showed normal levels of c-Myc at early time points and decreased levels at 24 and 48 hours after treatment. c-Jun increased as early as 6 hours after treatment and returned to lower (yet still elevated over control) levels by 48 hours. To determine possible functional consequences of increased c-Jun expression, gel electrophoretic mobility assays were conducted that showed increased AP-1 binding at 24 and 48 hours after treatment. These data show that VES induces apoptosis in reticuloendotheliosis virus-transformed lymphoid cells and suggest that decreases of c-Myc protein and increases of c-Jun protein and DNA binding capacity may be playing a role in VES-mediated events leading to apoptosis in this cell type.
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PMID:RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate induces apoptosis in avian retrovirus-transformed lymphoid cells. 883 58

myc oncogenes are transcription factors regulating the level of expression of other genes. Using a subtraction/coexpression strategy, a murine genetic target for Myc regulation was isolated. To further characterize this target gene, named ECA39, we have recently isolated the human, nematode and budding yeast homologs of the mouse gene. The recognition site for Myc binding, located 3' to the start site of transcription in the mouse gene, is conserved in the human homolog. Transfection experiments demonstrated that the Myc binding site of the human gene, mediates activation of a reporter gene in response to over-expression of c-myc. The activation was better executed when the c-Myc binding element was positioned downstream to the promoter, which is the usual position of the c-Myc DNA binding element in its genetic targets. The tissue specific expression of human ECA39 during embryogenesis is similar to that of the mouse homolog. Moreover, ECA39 is expressed in c-myc induced human tumors. It is expressed in Burkitt's lymphoma (where c-myc is translocated and activated) but not in non Burkitt's B-cell lymphoma or in T-cell lymphoma. Thus, it seems that ECA39 is a target for c-myc oncogenesis in humans. In yeast, where c-myc is absent, the ECA39 sequences lack the c-Myc binding element. However, the promoter region of the yeast ECA39 harbors several Gcn4 binding elements. Moreover, ECA39 is markedly down regulated in cells deleted for gcn4, and deletion of Gcn4 binding elements down regulated the transcription from ECA39 promoter. We thus suggest that ECA39 is a target for c-Myc regulation in mammals, while in yeast the regulator is not c-Myc but the c-Jun/c-Fos homolog - Gcn4.
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PMID:ECA39 is regulated by c-Myc in human and by a Jun/Fos homolog, Gcn4, in yeast. 893 31

RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate (vitamin E succinate, VES) treatment of murine EL4 T lymphoma cells induced the cells to undergo apoptosis. After 48 hours of VES treatment at 20 micrograms/ml, 95% of cells were apoptotic. Evidence for the induction of apoptosis by VES treatments is based on staining of DNA for detection of chromatin condensation/fragmentation, two-color flow-cytometric analyses of DNA content, and end-labeled DNA and electrophoretic analyses for detection of DNA ladder formation. VES-treated EL4 cells were blocked in the G1 cell cycle phase; however, apoptotic cells came from all cell cycle phases. Analyses of mRNA expression of genes involved in apoptosis revealed decreased c-myc and increased bcl-2, c-fos, and c-jun mRNAs within three to six hours after treatment. Western analyses showed increased c-Jun, c-Fos, and Bcl-2 protein levels. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed increased AP-1 binding at 6, 12, and 24 hours after treatment and decreased c-Myc binding after 12 and 24 hours of VES treatment. Treatments of EL4 cells with VES+RRR-alpha-to-copherol reduced apoptosis without effecting DNA synthesis arrest. Treatments of EL4 cells with VES+rac-6-hydroxyl-2, 5,7,8-tetramethyl-chroman-2-carboxylic acid, butylated hydroxytoluene, or butylated hydroxyanisole had no effect on apoptosis or DNA synthesis arrest caused by VES treatments. Analyses of bcl-2, c-myc, c-jun, and c-fos mRNA levels in cells receiving VES + RRR-alpha-tocopherol treatments showed no change from cells receiving VES treatments alone, implying that these changes are correlated with VES treatments but are not causal for apoptosis. However, treatments with VES + RRR-alpha-tocopherol decreased AP-1 binding to consensus DNA oligomer, suggesting AP-1 involvement in apoptosis induced by VES treatments.
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PMID:RRR-alpha-tocopheryl succinate inhibits EL4 thymic lymphoma cell growth by inducing apoptosis and DNA synthesis arrest. 897 Jan 89

Studies were carried out to explore how extracellular matrix molecules, such as fibronectin (FN), promote capillary endothelial (CE) cell growth. When G0-synchronized cells were plated on FN-coated dishes, expression of the immediate-early mRNAs, c-fos, c-myc and c-jun, was rapidly induced, even in the absence of serum or soluble growth factors. Moreover, plating cells on different FN densities (5-200 micrograms/150 mm dish), resulted in a dose-dependent increase in the steady state levels of these mRNAs. Addition of FGF potentiated gene activation and was required for maximal DNA synthesis, however, the overall steady-state level of gene induction was dictated primarily by the density of immobilized FN. Expression of junB also was induced when suspended cells bound RGD-peptide coated microbeads that promote integrin clustering, but not when the suspended cells bound beads coated with other receptor ligands (e.g. acetylated low density protein) or when they were stimulated by soluble FN or FGF in the absence of substrate adhesion. c-Jun exhibited a similar requirement for gene induction except that it also was partially induced by binding to soluble FN alone. In contrast, c-fos expression was induced by all stimuli tested. Interestingly, inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange using hexamethylene-amiloride prevented most of the FN-induced increase in c-jun expression whereas it was relatively ineffective when cells were simultaneously stimulated by both FN and FGF. These data demonstrate that cell adhesion to extracellular matrix and associated integrin binding can directly activate signaling cascades in quiescent CE cells that lead to induction of immediate-early genes associated with the G0/G1 transition and thereby, stimulate these cells to reenter the growth cycle.
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PMID:Integrin-dependent induction of early growth response genes in capillary endothelial cells. 901 33

In the Syrian hamster, neonatal diethylstilbestrol (DES) treatment and then postpubertal estrogen stimulation induces hyperplasia plus apoptosis (preneoplastic responses) and ultimately neoplasia in the endometrial epithelial cell compartment. As part of a project to investigate the molecular and cellular mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon, expression of several proto-oncogenes (c-jun, c-fos, c-myc, bax, bcl-2 and bcl-x) was compared in estrogen-stimulated uteri from control versus neonatally DES-treated hamsters. According to Northern blot analysis of total uterine RNA, levels of the 3.2-kb c-jun and 2.4-kb c-myc transcripts were not altered by neonatal DES treatment. However, the 1.0 kb bax and 2.7 kb bcl-x transcript levels were significantly increased in the neonatally DES-exposed uteri. According to immunohistochemical analysis of paraformaldehyde-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue sections, levels of c-Jun, c-Fos, c-Myc, Bax, and Bcl-x proteins were enhanced dramatically in both the luminal and glandular epithelial cells of neonatally DES-exposed uteri. In contrast, the immunostaining signal for Bcl-2 protein was decreased consistently in the epithelial cells of neonatally DES-exposed uteri. In conclusion, neonatal DES treatment induced persistent and epithelial cell-specific imbalances in the estrogen-regulated uterine expression of c-jun, c-fos, c-myc, bax, bcl-2, and bcl-x proto-oncogenes. These imbalances likely play a role in the molecular mechanism by which neonatal DES treatment induces altered estrogen responsiveness including hyperplasia, apoptosis, and ultimately neoplasia in the epithelial compartment of the hamster uterus.
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PMID:Neonatal diethylstilbestrol treatment alters the estrogen-regulated expression of both cell proliferation and apoptosis-related proto-oncogenes (c-jun, c-fos, c-myc, bax, bcl-2, and bcl-x) in the hamster uterus. 910 Oct 88

Isolated murine splenic B cells undergo spontaneous apoptosis. Motifs containing unmethylated CpG dinucleotides in bacterial DNA or in synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) are known to activate murine B cells. Now we show that ODN that induce spleen B cell cycle entry also inhibit spontaneous apoptosis in a sequence-specific fashion. Reversal of the CG to GC abolished activity. Methylation of the central cytosine decreased activity. When CpG is preceded by a cytosine or followed by a guanine, activity was abolished. Other substitutions at the same positions had no effect. Dose-response curves for apoptosis protection and G1 entry suggested that a uniform population of ODN recognition sites controlled downstream ODN effects. A CpG ODN with a nuclease-resistant phosphorothioate backbone (S-ODN) was also active, and increased the levels of c-myc, egr-1, c-jun, bclXL, and bax mRNA and c-Myc, c-Jun, Bax, and BclXL protein in spleen B cells. Levels of c-myb, myn, c-Ki-ras, and bcl2 mRNA remained unchanged. When protein synthesis was inhibited, at 16 h ODN-induced cell cycle entry was abolished and apoptosis protection was partially preserved. Under these conditions, c-Myc was still present, but c-Jun and BclXL were not detected. Our results suggest that CpG containing ODN motifs provide signals for both survival and cell cycle entry. Single base changes determine whether this signal proceeds through a rate-limiting step governing at least two steps in apoptosis (plasma membrane transition, DNA cleavage) and two phases of the cell cycle (G1 and S phase entry). This biologic action is associated with increased c-Myc, c-Jun, and BclXL expression.
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PMID:CpG oligodeoxyribonucleotides rescue mature spleen B cells from spontaneous apoptosis and promote cell cycle entry. 963 2

Transitions from small cell (SCLC) to non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cells have been documented both in vitro and in vivo and are thought to be an important step during tumor progression of human small cell lung cancer towards a treatment-resistant tumor state. We have screened NSCLC and SCLC cell lines for differences in the composition of nuclear transcription factors using consensus oligonucleotide sequences (SRE, Ets, TRE, CRE, B-motif, GAS, E-box). We found NSCLC cells to exhibit significantly higher AP-1 binding activity than SCLC cells consistent with the increased expression of CD44, an AP-1 target gene. To gain more insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying these differences, we analysed SCLC cell lines (NCI-N592 and NCI-H69) which were phenotypically transformed into NSCLC-type cells by transfection with activated H-ras and c-myc oncogenes. In these cells, ras-induced transition is accompanied by a strong induction of AP-1-binding activity along with increased expression of CD44 mRNA and protein. When analysing the composition of the AP-1 complex in more detail and comparing ras-induced versus phorbol ester-induced changes, we found Fra-1 to be the major component induced in ras-transfected but not in phorbol-ester treated or non-treated parental SCLC cells. This finding is paralleled by the observation that among the various members of the Fos and Jun family analysed (c-Fos, FosB, Fra-1, Fra-2, c-Jun, JunD, JunB) fra-1 is the only gene to be exclusively expressed in NSCLC cells but not in cells of SCLC origin. Our data, thus, point to a histiotype-related mechanism of recruitment among AP-1 proteins which may have bearings on the fate of lung cancer development.
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PMID:Transition from SCLC to NSCLC phenotype is accompanied by an increased TRE-binding activity and recruitment of specific AP-1 proteins. 966 39

We previously have shown that the zinc finger transcription factor Egr-1 blocked granulocytic differentiation of HL-60 cells, restricting differentiation along the monocytic lineage. Egr-1 also was observed to block granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-induced differentiation of interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent 32Dcl3 hematopoietic precursor cells, endowing the cells with the ability to be induced by granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) for terminal differentiation along the macrophage lineage. To better understand the function of Egr-1 as a positive modulator of monocytic differentiation, in this work we have studied the effect of ectopic expression of Egr-1 on the murine myeloblastic leukemic cell line M1, which is induced for differentiation by the physiological inducer IL-6. It is shown that, unlike in HL-60 and 32Dcl3 cells, ectopic expression of Egr-1 in M1 cells resulted in activation of the macrophage differentiation program in the absence of differentiation inducer. This included the appearance of morphologically differentiated cells, decreased growth rate in mass culture, and cloning efficiency in soft agar, and expression of endogenous c-myb and c-myc mRNAs was markedly downregulated. Untreated M1Egr-1 cells also exhibited cell adherence, expression of Fc and C3 receptors, and upregulation of the myeloid differentiation primary response genes c-Jun, junD, and junB and the late genetic markers ferritin light-chain and lysozyme. Ectopic expression of Egr-1 in M1 cells also dramatically increased the sensitivity of the cells for IL-6-induced differentiation, allowed a higher proportion of M1 cells to become terminally differentiated under conditions of optimal stimulation for differentiation, and decreased M1 leukemogenicity in vivo. These findings demonstrate that the functions of Egr-1 as a positive modulator of macrophage differentiation vary, depending on the state of lineage commitment for differentiation of the hematopoietic cell type.
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PMID:The zinc finger transcription factor Egr-1 activates macrophage differentiation in M1 myeloblastic leukemia cells. 973 Oct 53

In response to oxidant stress, the cardiovascular system is known to express a number of genes, which could occur owing to the participation of mitogen-activated protein kinases such as MAPKs, ERK and JNK (SAPK) followed by stimulation of at least two well-defined transcription factors NF-KB and AP-1 (c-Fos and c-Jun). Oxidants activate cytosolic and membrane-bound PLA2 activities with the subsequent production of AA metabolites such as HETEs, which subsequently stimulate ERK and JNK (SAPK) activities leading to the activation of transcriptional factors and the ultimate stimulation of the transcription of several mitogen-stress-responsive genes. LacCer, a ceramide analogue present in atherosclerotic plaques, has been found to induce proliferation of aortic smooth muscle cells. LacCer is involved in Ras-GTP loading, activation of kinase cascades (MEK, Raf, p44 MAPK) and c-fos expression. TNF-alpha, on the other hand, induces c-fos, c-myc and c-jun expression. Recent investigations link ceramide and its analogues to the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) cascade, stress-activated protein kinase-c-Jun kinase (SAPK/JNK) cascade and apoptotic responses. These critical steps in the signalling pathways are sensitive to intracellular thiol-redox and protease(s)-antiprotease(s) status, both of which can be modified by oxidants. Because mobilisation of intracellular Ca2+ caused by a variety of signals also plays a role in the activation of the signalling pathways, an important aspect of future work will be to ascertain the roles of oxidants and Ca2+ individually and in combination in the activation of the signalling pathways. The following two important questions also deserve future attention: (1) How does NF-kB shield cells from apoptotic death? and (2) By what mechanisms does the activated NF-kB cause cellular transformation? Furthermore, the role of AP-1 acting as transcriptional activator seems clear, but the target genes remain to be defined.
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PMID:Oxidant-mediated activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and nuclear transcription factors in the cardiovascular system: a brief overview. 988 18

Bufalin, a component of the Chinese medicine chan'su, induces apoptosis in various lines of human tumor cells, such as leukemia HL60 and U937 cells, by altering the expression of apoptosis-related genes, for example, bcl-2 and c-myc. In this study, we characterized a gene that is involved in bufalin-induced apoptosis by the differential display (DD) technique. The partial nucleotide sequence of one of the differentially expressed clones obtained after treatment with bufalin was identical to that of the human gene for Tiam1. When U937 cells were treated with 10(-7) M bufalin, expression of both Tiam1 mRNA and the protein was induced 1 h after the start of the treatment. The increase of Tiam1 mRNA was transient but the level of Tiam1 protein continued to increase at least for 6 h. In addition, the activities of Rac1 and p21-activated kinase (PAK) were also stimulated by bufalin treatment. To evaluate the role of Tiam1 in the apoptotic process, we examined the effects of the expression of sense and antisense RNA for Tiam1 in U937 cells. Apoptosis was strongly induced by bufalin in cells that expressed sense RNA for Tiam1 as compared to apoptosis in control cells treated with bufalin only. Cells expressing antisense RNA for Tiaml were significantly more resistant than the control bufalin-treated cells to induction of DNA fragmentation in response to bufalin. Moreover, sense transformants had elevated activities of PAK and c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK). These results suggest that Tiaml might play a critical role in bufalin-induced apoptosis through the activation of Rac1, PAK, and JNK pathway.
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PMID:Tiam1 is involved in the regulation of bufalin-induced apoptosis in human leukemia cells. 1022 92


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